American Evil: The Cannibal Giants Nobody Wants to Talk About
An article based on the research of Steve Quayle, L.A. Marzulli, and Native American legends.
In the frozen folklore of Northern Europe, the wights lurk as undead terrors with corpse-pale skin and enormous frames, creatures that shamble through Old Norse sagas and Anglo-Saxon nightmares with such consistency that scholars dismissed them as obvious fantasy. But what if an entire continent got the details right about something real? When you place a Scandinavian wight next to a Choctaw Nahullo, when you compare the draugr of Iceland to the Sitecah of Nevada, something deeply unsettling emerges from the pattern. White skin that stands out enough to emphasize in the description. Giant stature that makes normal humans look like children. A taste for human flesh that appears in account after account. Europe preserved these beings as undead monsters in their folklore. Native American tribes thousands of miles away described them as living giants their ancestors fought and killed. The Bible records them as Nephilim who required divine judgment to destroy. Three separate traditions on …





